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Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University
- Neve Gordon, (Dept. of Political
Science) writes
in the anti-Semitic web magazine "Counterpunch" that Israel is
practicing the "politics of death"
http://counterpunch.org/gordon06072008.html
The
Occupation and the Politics of Death
The
Land, Not the People
Counterpunch, Weekend
EditionJune 7 / 8, 2008
By NEVE
GORDON
On June 8, 1967, just a few hours after the
Israeli military captured Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, Haram al Sharif,
Defense Minister Moshe Dayan visited the site. Noticing that troops
had hung an Israeli flag on the cap of the Al-Aqsa shrine, Dayan
asked one of the soldiers to remove it, adding that displaying the
Israeli national symbol for all to see was an unnecessarily
provocative act.
Those who have visited the Occupied Territories
in the past years have no doubt noticed Israeli flags fluttering
over almost every building Israel occupies as well as above every
Jewish settlement. Ariel Sharon’s highly publicized visit to the
Al-Aqsa compound in September 2000 – an act that served as the
trigger for the second Intifada – could be considered the final step
in a process that has ultimately undone Dayan’s strategic legacy of
trying to normalize the occupation by concealing Israel’s presence.
“Don’t rule them,” Dayan once said, “let them lead their own lives.”
Another significant change that has transpired
over the past 41 years involves the Israeli government’s
relationship to trees, the symbol of life. If in 1968 Israel helped
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip plant some 618,000 trees and provided
farmers with improved varieties of seeds for vegetables and field
crops, during the first three years of the second Intifada Israel
destroyed more than ten percent of Gaza’s agricultural land and
uprooted over 226,000 trees.
The appearance and proliferation of the flag on
the one hand, and the razing of trees on the other, signify a
fundamental transformation in Israel’s attempts to control the
occupied Palestinian inhabitants. It appears as if Israel decided to
alter its methods of upholding the occupation, replacing a politics
of life, which aimed to secure the existence and livelihood of the
Palestinian inhabitants, with a politics of death.
This shift manifests itself in numerous ways.
During the occupation’s first decade, for example, Israel tried to
decrease Palestinian unemployment in order to manage the population,
but following the new millennium it intentionally produced
unemployment in the Occupied Territories. Israel provided
immunization for cattle and poultry during the first years after the
1967, but in 2008 it created conditions that prevented people from
receiving immunization.
Changes like these clearly reflect the radical
transformation in the repertoires of violence deployed in the
Occupied Territories. Whereas an estimated 650 Palestinians were
killed in the West Bank and Gaza Strip during the first two decades
following the 1967 War, during the six-year period between 2001 and
2007, Israel has, on average, killed more than 650 Palestinians per
year.
The number of Israelis killed in this conflict
has significantly increased as well, and this is not coincidental.
Whereas during the thirteen-year period between December 1987 and
September 2000, 422 Israeli were killed by Palestinians, during the
six-year period from the eruption of the second intifada until the
end of 2006, 1,019 Israelis were killed.
Commentators do not usually attempt to make
sense of such changes, and, when they do, they almost always
underscore the policy choices of the Israeli government or the
decisions made by the different Palestinian political factions. Such
an approach, while often helpful, elides the significant impact of
the occupation’s guiding principle.
By the occupation’s guiding principle, I mean
the distinction Israel has made between the land it occupied and the
people who inhabit the land. Levi Eshkol, Israel’s prime minister in
1967, clearly articulated this distinction during a Labor Party
meeting that took place just three months after the war. Discussing
the consequences of Israel’s military victory, he turned to Golda
Meir, who was then the party’s general secretary, and said: “I
understand… you covet the dowry, but not the bride.”
One cannot fully understand the occupation and
the reason it has become more violent without taking into account
the separation between the dowry (i.e., the land that Israel
occupied in June 1967) and the bride (the Palestinian population).
This principle is the propelling force behind the massive settlement
project, the by-pass roads, the expropriation of Palestinian water
and the erection of the separation barrier deep inside Palestinian
territory. And it is precisely these latter Israeli actions that
have precipitated the intensification of violence in the Occupied
Territories and, one might even argue, the rise of Hamas.
The occupation’s guiding principle has
consequently produced the very conditions that are now impeding a
peace agreement based on the two-state solution. Recognizing the
full ramifications of this principle is crucial since it allows us
to see beyond the smoke screen of political proclamations and
statements, and to improve our understanding of why the acrimonious
conflict has developed in the way that it has. Just as importantly,
the principle sheds light on how the conflict can be resolved, since
the key to reaching a just and peaceful solution involves reuniting
the Palestinian people and their land and offering them full
sovereignty over the land. So long as the guiding principle is
ignored, blood will continue to be spilled.
Neve Gordon teaches politics at Ben-Gurion
University, Israel. Read about his new book, Israel's Occupation,
and more at
www.israelsoccupation.info
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